Mary Hunter Austin Quotes

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All quotes by Mary Hunter Austin: Genius Rain Water more...
  • The real wonder is not that one man should be a genius, but that every man should not be.

    Real   Men   Genius  
    Mary Hunter Austin, Maxwell Aley (1925). “Everyman's genius”
  • Man learned to resort to the dance when he felt helpless or fragmentary, when he felt dislocated in his universe.

    Men   Dancing   Resorts  
  • Genius may be for an hour or a thousand years; its indispensable quality is continuity with the life-push.

    Years   Quality   Genius  
    Mary Hunter Austin, Maxwell Aley (1925). “Everyman's genius”
  • No man can be stronger than his destiny.

    Fate   Destiny   Men  
    Mary Hunter Austin, Marjorie Pryse (1987). “Stories from the Country of Lost Borders”, p.24, Rutgers University Press
  • Life set itself to new processions of seed-time and harvest, the skin newly turned to seasonal variations, the very blood humming to new altitudes.

    Blood   Skins   Variation  
  • You have to beat out for yourself many mornings on the windy headlands the sense of the fact that you get the same rainbow in the cloud drift over Waban and the spray of your garden hose. And not necessarily then do you live up to it.

    Morning   Garden   Clouds  
    Mary Hunter Austin, Marjorie Pryse (1987). “Stories from the country of Lost borders”, Rutgers Univ Pr
  • I suppose that Italy must always lie like some lovely sunken island at the bottom of all passionate dreams, from which at the flood it may arise; the air of it is charged with subtle essences of romance. One supposes Italy must be organized for the need of lovers.

    Dream   Lying   Islands  
    Mary Hunter Austin (1985). “A Woman of Genius”, p.239, Feminist Press at CUNY
  • The palpable sense of mystery in the desert air breeds fables, chiefly of lost treasure. ... It is a question whether it is not better to be bitten by the little horned snake of the desert that goes sidewise and strikes without coiling, than by the tradition of a lost mine.

    Air   Snakes   Desert  
    Mary Hunter Austin, Marjorie Pryse (1987). “Stories from the Country of Lost Borders”, p.16, Rutgers University Press
  • The manner of the country makes the usage of life there, and the land will not be lived in except in its own fashion.

    Country   Fashion   Land  
    Mary Hunter Austin, Marjorie Pryse (1987). “Stories from the Country of Lost Borders”, p.57, Rutgers University Press
  • This is the sense of the desert hills, that there is room enough and time enough

    Desert   Rooms   Hills  
    Mary Hunter Austin, Marjorie Pryse (1987). “Stories from the Country of Lost Borders”, p.56, Rutgers University Press
  • Rabbits are a foolish people. They do not fight except with their own kind, nor use their paws except for feet, and appear to have no reason for existence but to furnish meals for meat-eaters. In flight they seem to rebound from the earth of their own elasticity, but keep a sober pace going to the spring. It is the young watercress that tempts them and the pleasures of society, for they seldom drink.

    Spring   Fighting   Feet  
    Mary Hunter Austin, Marjorie Pryse (1987). “Stories from the Country of Lost Borders”, p.25, Rutgers University Press
  • All mountain streets have streams to thread them, or deep grooves where a stream might run. You would do well to avoid that range uncomforted by singing floods. You will find it forsaken of most things but beauty and madness and death and God.

    Mary Hunter Austin (2006). “Essential Mary Austin: A Selection of Mary Austin's Best Writing”, Heyday Books
  • Genius . . . arises in the natural, aboriginal concern for the conscious unity of all phenomena.

    Unity   Genius   Natural  
  • I am not sure that God always knows who are his great men; he is so very careless of what happens to them while they live.

    Men   Not Sure   Careless  
  • It is no use trying to improve on children's names for wildflowers.

    Children   Names   Trying  
    Mary Hunter Austin, Marjorie Pryse (1987). “Stories from the Country of Lost Borders”, p.84, Rutgers University Press
  • Death by starvation is slow.

    Mary Hunter Austin, Marjorie Pryse (1987). “Stories from the Country of Lost Borders”, p.35, Rutgers University Press
  • What women have to stand on squarely [is] not their ability to see the world in the way men see it, but the importance and validity of their seeing it in some other way.

    Women   World   Way  
    Mary Hunter Austin (1994). “Cactus Thorn”, p.108, University of Nevada Press
  • Man is a great blunderer going about in the woods, and there is no other except the bear makes so much noise. ... The cunningest hunger is hunted in turn, and what he leaves of his kill is meat for some other. That is the economy of nature, but with it all there is not sufficient account taken of the works of man. There is no scavenger that eats tin cans, and no wild thing leaves a like disfigurement on the forest floor.

    Nature   Taken   Men  
    Mary Hunter Austin (2006). “Essential Mary Austin: A Selection of Mary Austin's Best Writing”, Heyday Books
  • Ride your emotions as the shallop rides the waves; don't get upset among them. There are people who enjoy getting swamped emotionally, just as, incredibly, there are people who enjoy getting drunk.

    People   Drunk   Upset  
    Mary Hunter Austin, Maxwell Aley (1925). “Everyman's genius”
  • It is always so much easier to be moral than it is to be spiritual.

  • To underestimate one's thirst, to pass a given landmark to the right or left, to find a dry spring where one looked for running water - there is no help for any of these things.

    Running   Spring   Water  
    Mary Hunter Austin, Reuben J. Ellis (1996). “Beyond Borders: The Selected Essays of Mary Austin”, p.34, SIU Press
  • The desert floras shame us with their cheerful adaptations to the seasonal limitations. Their whole duty is to flower and fruit, and they do it hardly, or with tropical luxuriance, as the rain admits. ... One hopes the land may breed like qualities in her human offspring, not tritely to 'try,' but to do.

    Rain   Flower   Land  
    Mary Hunter Austin, Marjorie Pryse (1987). “Stories from the Country of Lost Borders”, p.11, Rutgers University Press
  • For all the toll the desert takes of a man it gives compensations, deep breaths, deep sleep, and the communion of the stars.

    Stars   Sleep   Men  
    Mary Hunter Austin, Marjorie Pryse (1987). “Stories from the Country of Lost Borders”, p.22, Rutgers University Press
  • As I walk .. as I walk .. / The universe .. is walking with me .. / Beautifully .. it walks before me .... / Beautifully .. on every side .... / As I walk .. I walk with beauty.

    Beauty   Sides   Walks  
    Mary Hunter Austin (1928). “The children sing in the far West”
  • Of the first philosophers, then, most thought the principles which were of the nature of matter were the only principles of all things. That of which all things that are consist, the first from which they come to be, the last into which they are resolved....this they say is the element and this is the principle of things.... yet they do not all agree as to the number and the nature of these principle is water.

    Rain   Rivers   Numbers  
  • The utmost the American novelist can hope for, if he hopes at all to see his work included in the literature of his time, is that it may eventually be found to be along in the direction of the growing tip of collective consciousness. Preeminently the novelist's gift is that of access to the collective mind.

    Mary Hunter Austin (1996). “Beyond Borders: The Selected Essays of Mary Austin”, p.86, SIU Press
  • Nothing the desert produces expresses it better than the unhappy growth of the tree yuccas

    Tree   Growth   Atheism  
    Mary Hunter Austin, Reuben J. Ellis (1996). “Beyond Borders: The Selected Essays of Mary Austin”, p.34, SIU Press
  • Over the tops of it, beginning to dusk under a young white moon, trailed a wavering ghost of smoke, and at the end of it I came upon the Pocket Hunter making a dry camp in the friendly scrub.

    Moon   White   Friendly  
    Mary Hunter Austin, Marjorie Pryse (1987). “Stories from the Country of Lost Borders”, p.43, Rutgers University Press
  • Probably we never fully credit the interdependence of wild creatures, and their cognizance of the affairs of their own kind.

    Credit   Kind   Affair  
    Mary Hunter Austin, Marjorie Pryse (1987). “Stories from the Country of Lost Borders”, p.37, Rutgers University Press
  • When a woman ceases to alter the fashion of her hair, you guess that she has passed the crisis of her experience.

    1903 The Land of Little Rain,'The Basket Maker'.
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Mary Hunter Austin quotes about: Genius Rain Water